logo
Sarco activist dead at 47: Man who was arrested for murder after a woman ended her life in a pod dies by assisted suicide

Sarco activist dead at 47: Man who was arrested for murder after a woman ended her life in a pod dies by assisted suicide

Daily Mail​2 days ago

A euthanasia advocate who was questioned for murder after the death of a woman using a suicide pod last year has died by assisted suicide, it was announced yesterday.
Dr Florian Willet, 47, was arrested in September 2024 following the death of a 64-year-old woman using a Sarco suicide pod after she was allegedly found inside with strangulation marks on her neck.
He was only person present for the death of the woman, who was the first person to use the nitrogen gas capsule, after it had been set up in a forest near Merishausen, Switzerland.
Dr Willet was arrested when police arrived at the scene and he remained in custody for 70 days as investigators probed the circumstances surrounding the death.
The public prosecutor said that there had been a 'strong suspicion' that 'intentional homicide' had been at play.
But these accusations were said to have such a traumatic effect on the author and activist that he was admitted to a psychiatric hospital twice before his death on May 5.
Exit International Director Dr Philip Nitschke, who invented the Sarco pod, wrote yesterday: 'When Florian was released suddenly and unexpectedly from pre-trial detention in early December 2024, he was a changed man.
'Gone was his warm smile and self-confidence. In its place was a man who seemed deeply traumatised by the experience of incarceration and the wrongful accusation of strangulation.'
Dr Nitschke told Dutch news outlet Volkskrant that Dr Willet died last month in Cologne 'with the help of a specialized organization'.
In Dr Willet's obituary, which yesterday announced his death, Dr Nitschke revealed that the 47-year-old had 'fallen' from the third floor of his property in Zurich earlier this year, causing him 'serious damage'.
Dr Nitschke said he was fully assessed by a psychiatric team during his three-month recovery, who said Dr Willet had developed 'an acute polymorphic psychotic disorder'.
He says this had been brought on 'following the stress of pre-trial detention and the associated processes'.
Dr Nitschke added: 'No one was surprised. Florian's spirit was broken. He knew that he did nothing illegal or wrong, but his belief in the rule of law in Switzerland was in tatters.
'In the final months of his life, Dr Florian Willet shouldered more than any man should.'
Dr Willet had informed Swiss authorities after the woman's death and they quickly descended on the forest.
Police discovered the woman's lifeless body inside the pod and arrested several people.
Dr Willet was detained with two lawyers and a Volkskrant photographer who had been taking pictures of the pod and documented the woman arriving in the woodland.
The public prosecutor in the Schaffhausen canton said that Sarco's creators had been warned not to use the device in the region, but that the warning had not been heeded.
'We warned them in writing,' prosecutor Peter Sticher said in September. 'We said that if they came to Schaffhausen and used Sarco, they would face criminal consequences.'
Dr Willet described the death in the controversial capsule as 'peaceful, fast and dignified'.
The pod is designed so that the push of a button injects nitrogen gas into the sealed chamber, with the person inside then dying by suffocation within a few minutes.
Before his arrest Dr Willet said he had 'considered' suicide at the age of five. His father died by suicide when he was 14 years old and he said he was 'completely fine with it.'
He added: 'I was extremely sad because I loved my father. But, I understood immediately my father wanted to do this because he was a rational person, which means that expecting him to remain alive just because I need a father would mean extending his suffering.'
For confidential support, call Samaritans on 116123 or visit www.samaritans.org

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Michelsen to take over Denmark women's team after Euros
Michelsen to take over Denmark women's team after Euros

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Michelsen to take over Denmark women's team after Euros

June 4 (Reuters) - Jakob Michelsen will become the new coach of Denmark's women's national team after the upcoming European Championship, the Danish Football Association said on Wednesday. Michelsen will take over from Andree Jeglertz after the tournament in Switzerland, which runs throughout July. The 44-year-old Michelsen joins from Norwegian men's side HamKam and has signed an agreement until 2028, with the possibility of extensions. The Danish team, whose best result was a runner-up finish in 2017 when they lost to the Netherlands, will play in Group C against Sweden, Germany and Poland.

What on earth is going on with the Lionesses?
What on earth is going on with the Lionesses?

Telegraph

time3 hours ago

  • Telegraph

What on earth is going on with the Lionesses?

With a month to go until the start of England's bid to retain their European Championship crown in Switzerland there is too much confusion, acrimony and upheaval to be confident of success. Manager Sarina Wiegman has been bombarded with problems and engulfed by distractions: the retirements of experienced players, the withdrawal of vice-captain Millie Bright to focus on her health, ongoing injury concerns and the impending loss of her trusted lieutenant, assistant manager and tactician Arjan Veurink at the end of the tournament. It raises the question: is she partly to blame for the sudden loss of players to retirement? Has the blunt and direct manner in which she delivers her messages to the players started to be resented rather than admired? For so long, the Lionesses have projected unity, togetherness and professionalism. They have been a well-oiled machine and have reached at least the semi-finals of every major tournament for a decade, winning the Euros in 2022 and suffering a narrow defeat by Spain in the World Cup final in Australia a year later. It is an unparalleled era of success for English football but is the empire starting to crumble? Is the unity and drive starting to fray? Is Wiegman, the most successful international manager in women's football, in danger of losing her Midas touch? These are pertinent questions to ask because the warning signs are there. There are several red flights flashing on the dashboard and so many issues to resolve. For the first time since Wiegman arrived in September 2021, the England camp does not give the impression it is a happy one. Whether it can pull itself together in time for the Euros remains to be seen. They have been drawn in an extremely tough group alongside the Netherlands and France – ranked 10th and 11th in the world respectively – as well as Wales, while they will be defending their title without five of those players who started the final in 2022. The sudden and – on the face of it – selfish retirement of Mary Earps was, perhaps, the explosion that shattered the illusion of togetherness. At the age of 32, Earps decided to walk out on the England squad, five weeks before the start of a major tournament, because she did not want to be back-up to new first-choice goalkeeper Hannah Hampton. It has left England short of experience in that department and Wiegman could barely contain her irritation and frustration. There was a coldness in the words that accompanied the statement announcing Earps's decision. Behind the scenes, things were fractious and frosty. The decision stunned and angered England's manager as she had made it clear to Earps that while her role was changing she was still needed, still valued and still important. Even some of Earps's team-mates, despite all the social media tributes, have privately said it felt like they were being abandoned at the worst possible time. It shocked everyone in camp last week and it exposed splits. Some felt Wiegman could have handled the situation better, others feel Earps's behaviour was petulant and self-absorbed. To lose one senior player on the eve of a tournament, especially a star name like Earps, was hard to stomach. But to lose another two in quick succession is painful. Fran Kirby's retirement – after she had been told she would not make the Euros squad – is more understandable, as a 31-year-old outfield player who has had a litany of injury problems and had already decided the Euros would be her final tournament for England. Not being picked pushed the announcement forward and the words she used to explain her decision were warm and complimentary. Wiegman, in contrast to the Earps news, was full of praise for the forward. Now England's captain at the last World Cup, Bright, has chosen to withdraw from the squad to prioritise her mental and physical wellbeing. There are rumours Bright had also considered retirement, that she too had been told she is no longer guaranteed a starting place and did not want to travel as a result. Wiegman has not made any mention of this sort of decision. Ultimately, Bright is a brilliant character and remains, at the age of 31, a wonderful player who England needed, whether she was on the bench or starting in the centre of defence. She sounded drained when she explained her decision to pull out of the Nations League fixtures on her podcast, Daly Brightness, last week. We can only hope the break can revive her. In her personal statement to announce she was withdrawing from Euros selection, Bright described it as 'the hardest decision' she ever had to make. She said her 'pride and ego' wanted her to go, but she did not feel able to give '100 per cent mentally or physically'. Her departure is a huge blow for both the England squad and Wiegman. Having been lauded for her direct communication style when things were rosy – the players used to laugh and jest about her Dutch bluntness – have things turned in a different direction? Informing players like Earps and Kirby that they are not being picked or have fallen down the pecking order on the eve of the tournament might have been a little too honest and direct for those characters to take. The ripples these things cause within the squad can turn into waves of discontent and suspicion. International teams evolve, players get older and younger rivals emerge. Perhaps the star names, responsible for so much previous success, are struggling to cope with this natural order of things. England's form since the World Cup has been flaky, a good performance has been followed by a bad one. There does not seem to be the same confidence or cohesion when they play, while the news that Veurink will join the Netherlands set-up after the Euros may also have unsettled the environment. It does make you feel that the fitness of Lauren James is vital to England's title defence. The Chelsea player has not played since picking up a hamstring injury playing for England in April and might not be match fit, but it sounds like Wiegman is willing to gamble on her. It is one worth taking as she is as good as anyone in the women's game when she is at her best. There are other positives – the emergence of Grace Clinton, the return to form of Beth Mead, the goalscoring prowess of Alessia Russo, the return from injury of the excellent Lauren Hemp and Georgia Stanway, and the continued resilience and brilliance of Lucy Bronze and Leah Williamson. England still has a talented group who can go deep at another tournament this summer, but they need to pull together and shake themselves out of their malaise. They cannot afford to hold any resentment towards the manager or pine for players and friends who are no longer there. Professional sport is brutal and unforgiving; all that matters now are the players who are willing to represent their national team this summer.

Millie Bright: Chelsea captain withdraws from selection for Euro 2025 squad
Millie Bright: Chelsea captain withdraws from selection for Euro 2025 squad

BBC News

time3 hours ago

  • BBC News

Millie Bright: Chelsea captain withdraws from selection for Euro 2025 squad

England defender Millie Bright has made herself unavailable for selection for the Lionesses ahead of next month's 31-year-old said she made the decision as she was unable to "give 100% mentally or physically."The Chelsea captain recently withdrew from this month's Nations League squad, with the FA saying the centre-back was taking "an extended period of recovery".She becomes the third senior player unavailable for the tournament in Switzerland, after Mary Earps and Fran Kirby both announced their retirements from international football. Making the announcement on social media, Millie said that it was one of the "hardest decisions" she's ever had to explained: "Football has given me so much, and representing my country has always been my greatest honour."My pride and ego tells me to go, but I think the team and the fans deserve more. Right now I am not able to give 100 per cent mentally or physically."Millie Bright has been an important player for England since making her debut for the senior team nine years was vice-captain during England's successful Euros 2022 campaign, where the team lifted their first major trophy on home soil.A year later, at the 2023 Women's World Cup, Bright replaced the injured Leah Williamson in captaining the team made it all the way through to the final, where they finished the tournament as runners-up after losing 1-0 to Spain.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store